Last year, government agencies paid out some 31,500 KM in taxpayer money to the organizer of a ceremony for best manager awards, and the awards went to the officials who headed those agencies.
Đemal Memagić, the long-serving mayor of Olovo and a businessman, purchased an apartment in Poreč, Croatia, in 2021 for half a million BAM. He also included a car valued at BAM 412,000 in his asset declaration.
Đemal Memagić, a member of the Party of Democratic Action (SDA), has been the mayor of Olovo since 2012. It was already clear before the 2024 local elections that he would secure a fourth term, as he was the only candidate for the position.
In 2021, Memagić purchased an apartment in Poreč for just over half a million BAM. Along with his new property, in the asset declaration he submitted to the Central Election Commission of Bosnia and Herzegovina (CIKBiH) in 2024, he reported owning…
Last year, government agencies paid out some 31,500 KM in taxpayer money to the organizer of a ceremony for best manager awards, and the awards went to the officials who headed those agencies.
Because of bad business moves by government-owned corporations, local firms pay up to 37 percent more for natural gas than firms from neighboring countries and the EU.
Business partners gave Esed Radeljaš six and a half million KM to get the deals done. He kept the bulk of the money and did not hold his end of the bargain.
Patients in Cantonal Hospital Zenica typically must wait more than a year for cardiac ultrasounds.
A minister in Bosnia-Podrinje Canton, Esed Radeljaš, has a history of double-dealing property sales – he sold other people’s property as his own and build without licenses. Instead of punishment, he is serving a term in office.
After leaving the Sarajevo Public Transit Authority, Ibrahim Jusufranić and his family acquired property worth millions.
With a helping hand of a renowned Bihać physician, orthopedic outlets misused public health funds for production of disability aids in Una-Sana Canton.
Una-Sana Health Care Fund revoked license for dispensing subsidized medicine from doctors Amir Cerić, Mehmed Hukić, Hajrudin Omerović and Refika Purić-Sarajlija.
The energy sector companies account for nearly one third of public procurement contracts entered into during the past four and a half years.
Gordan Pavlović aka Goci from Foča was convicted in his youth of forgery of vehicle identification numbers. Nowadays, he owns coal mine, construction and trading firms, hotels and numerous offices and apartment buildings.
Until the end of this year, BiH is poised to adopt a state-wide low carbon scheme. The government plans to take a 641-million KM loan to finance the plan.
Esed Radeljaš was building a summer house on the land of judge Vladimir Špoljarić at a time when the judge was involved in his court case. Later they signed a bill of sale listing a piece of false information.
Last year, government agencies paid out some 31,500 KM in taxpayer money to the organizer of a ceremony for best manager awards, and the awards went to the officials who headed those agencies.
Because of bad business moves by government-owned corporations, local firms pay up to 37 percent more for natural gas than firms from neighboring countries and the EU.
Business partners gave Esed Radeljaš six and a half million KM to get the deals done. He kept the bulk of the money and did not hold his end of the bargain.
Patients in Cantonal Hospital Zenica typically must wait more than a year for cardiac ultrasounds.
A minister in Bosnia-Podrinje Canton, Esed Radeljaš, has a history of double-dealing property sales – he sold other people’s property as his own and build without licenses. Instead of punishment, he is serving a term in office.
After leaving the Sarajevo Public Transit Authority, Ibrahim Jusufranić and his family acquired property worth millions.
With a helping hand of a renowned Bihać physician, orthopedic outlets misused public health funds for production of disability aids in Una-Sana Canton.
Una-Sana Health Care Fund revoked license for dispensing subsidized medicine from doctors Amir Cerić, Mehmed Hukić, Hajrudin Omerović and Refika Purić-Sarajlija.
The energy sector companies account for nearly one third of public procurement contracts entered into during the past four and a half years.
Gordan Pavlović aka Goci from Foča was convicted in his youth of forgery of vehicle identification numbers. Nowadays, he owns coal mine, construction and trading firms, hotels and numerous offices and apartment buildings.
Until the end of this year, BiH is poised to adopt a state-wide low carbon scheme. The government plans to take a 641-million KM loan to finance the plan.
Esed Radeljaš was building a summer house on the land of judge Vladimir Špoljarić at a time when the judge was involved in his court case. Later they signed a bill of sale listing a piece of false information.
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